How one class grew from the roots of reading and writing to an urban garden that shapes our thinking about food, community and the journey from the field to the table.




In this class, students are encouraged to reflect and blog about what resonates with them during the work we approach each week. Once a week, usually later in the week, my students submit entries, we go over them and see what will get posted. ~Mary Ann D'Urso, Instructor




"I'm Scared"




Becky Rodriguez


I am sitting here in school, contemplating the week so far. It has been productive. The first day of my Edible English/Interview Project class when Mary Ann was telling the class what we were going to be doing and what she expects from us, I asked myself, "What have I gotten myself into?" When Mary Ann asked the class if we had any questions, I said, "I'm scared."

She said, "There's no need for you to be scared. I'm your guide." I felt relieved because I know that even though she's tough and she makes us write and rewrite and rewrite a paper, she's a really good teacher and she will get the best out of you. As a teacher, she sees the potential of her students. Hard work generates success and success is a journey. So I'm going to respect my journey and work as hard as I can to get the job done.

1/27/10- Intro to "Eddie"



Danielle Maholick

It was very cool getting a primer on "Eddie," the state-of-the-art digital audio equipment we were very blessed to get donated.




Samantha Sylvester

We started using the Edirols. This morning was very educational because we were taught what buttons to hit and not to and what buttons on the recorders we would need the most. We started to get the feel of how it is supposed to work and figure out the best way to record someone's voice. In our Edible English class, I'm learning that the possibilities are endless.

Student Reflections 1/26/2010 -




Samantha Sylvester


Today in class we started to look at different food and photo blogs. I looked at various websites like The Julie/Julia Project and Delish.com, which happened to be my favorite because I'm really trying to learn how to cook. It showed many recipes and had some links different from blogs. I think that Delish.com got the blogging thing down pat. I also viewed a photo blog that I thought was absolutely amazing. It is The New York Times photo blog called Lens. The pictures were just extremely gorgeous and this type of blog spoke out to me the most because of the open interpretation and the small blurbs by photographers. I hope when I get the chance to blog with photos, I can make my pictures stand out because when I take photos of my children, I see them in a different way.

Student Reflections 1/26/2010 - Class and Haiti




Adelia Rivera


So let's talk about my media class getting me to think about my favorite food.
Mary Ann, the class teacher, has us researching different photography and food sites for our Edible English/Interview class, which brings me to this blog. With this class I get the best of both worlds: Pictures (my family and I love to take pictures of everything) and Food! Who doesn't love food? I mean jeez, you have to eat to live. Might as well love what you eat.

So I'm sitting there looking at all these different, crazy and just weird looking pictures, when my classmate grabs my attention with a picture of this amazingly delicious looking pasta bowl. It immediately made me think of my favorite food, Penne pasta with vodka sauce and grilled chicken. I came to try this dish for the first time in my first trimester of pregnancy. Just seeing this dish for the first time, I knew it was going to be an explosion of favorites: It's all my favorite things mixed into one -- my pasta (really, I love anything carb, bread, rice, pasta, etc.) and lots of sauce. What could be better than this semi-thick creamy red-orange sauce, with a hint of garlic and basil! Uummm. Cut up grilled chicken sits like a king on his throne. I loved this dish and so did the boyfriend, who was so anal and tried to dictate everything I ate during the pregnancy. He could never intervene when I had this dish (which was very often). It was loaded with protein!


Photo blog:

I'm looking at these different photography sites when I came across this picture taken in Haiti after the quake had struck. It triggered so many thoughts. In the picture there were dozens of bodies stacked up on top of each other, with a handful of babies no more than a year old right on top. You might even mistake these innocent peaceful looking babies for sleeping. Simply taking a nap. Only we know the truth. They are not alive anymore.

As a person who is intrigued by homicide stories and has seen some gruesome pictures of dead bodies, there is something so unnatural about seeing a lifeless child. You would think the heartbreak of this picture stops there, but it doesn't. The father of one of the deceased babies (10 months old) is kneeling over his child mourning his loss. Isn't that just terrible? It makes you think about what you would do if put in that situation. As a mother of a 19-month-old, I always want my son to have a chance at life and to succeed. If I were in this situation and had the ability, I would do whatever I needed to save his life, even if that meant giving up my own. I would need to have faith that whoever found him would give him that chance at life that any child deserves.

Student Reflections 1/25/10




Samantha Sylvester



We started a new ritual in our class. It is a Monday morning tea tradition where someone in class prepares a cup of tea for everybody while the rest of the class settles in to the week with a piece of writing to read for the first half hour of class. This week we read a food essay by Scott Peacock called, "The Art of the Biscuit." This essay was very appealing to me because I just always thought of a biscuit as being the Pillsbury kind, but I was wrong. Now I know the importance of making them from scratch and exactly how to do it step-by-step. Reading this essay makes you think of how scrumptious a biscuit should taste. The ritual was a new experience. I can tell you this: It did help me wake up, clear my mind and start with a completely new attitude for the week instead of the usual lazy Monday I would have probably had. Tea and Moday mornings have changed forever.

~ ~ ~



Tiffany Taylor

I really enjoyed my Edible English class. My teacher Mary Ann said we were going to have a ritual and we would be drinking tea. I was surprised because in Mary Ann's class last term, we often came in and wrote for the first 10 minutes. The idea of tea in the morning was great.

As we had our ritual, we also quietly read about biscuits and how this guy made them from scratch. The things he put in, like baking powder, for example, were also made from scratch. It made me think about how making food from scratch is more natural than buying box foods like biscuit mix.

I'll look forward to Monday mornings, sitting back, crossing my legs, having a cup of hot tea and reading another essay.

Student Reflections 1/22/2010



Danielle Maholick


Yolisse Carattini, who works in the Development Office for the York Street Project, came into our class and spoke about how the school runs on donations and also about Kenmare/York Street Project's sponsors. I always thought Kenmare was a school funded by the Board of Education. My self-esteem boosted sky high because people who don't have any sense of who we are, are generous enough to donate their time and money so that me and my classmates can pursue our education.


Another thing that started drawing me into the class are these blogs. Every week we are going to be responsible to write a blog which is interesting and also much better than doing Mary Ann's essays (LOL). I think blogging is a great and more fun way to express yourself and have discussions. Maybe I think so because I'm a big Facebooker. However, I am no longer nervous about this class. I am more eager to see what's in store for us and can't wait to get into the interviewing part. Can't wait to start.




Samantha Sylvester


Our Edible English class with Mary Ann D'Urso has proven to be interesting thus far. Today, we learned from Yolisse Carattini, a Development Associate at York Street, that we would be blogging for our school. I was thrilled when she told us this because when I was at a former school, we used to write a newsletter. I liked the fact that I could be the voice of an entire student body by just letting everybody know what was going on and about upcoming events.

We also learned that we will be doing tons of reading, writing, interviews and multimedia projects. This should be a learning experience like no other. I am willing to take the ride because I know without the abundance of work that we are going to have, I don't think I would be ready for what I'm going to be asked to do in college. In this Edible English/Interview Project class, we are working with multimedia equipment which is used regularly by musicians and journalists. I'm thrilled to start working with our Eddies (Edirol R-09HR), our hand-held mics and MacBook Pros.

Edible English marries Kenmare Stories

Written by:
The Edible English/Kenmare Stories students: Lourdes Aviles, Malisa Azzarello, Coco Barker, Dana Hess and Leticia Valdivieso.


We were the Pioneers of Kenmare stories, a simple school wide interview project which has grown into an advanced multimedia course. For our first project, we interviewed the staff of the York Street project and our Kenmare teachers. Armed with old tape recorders and disposable cameras , we managed to work with what we had.

By the second trimester we were more comfortable with our "not getting any younger" equipment. Still , importing audio into PowerPoint was challenging. The audio sounded like a 1933 LP, full of hissing and sizzles. Thinking we were getting good photographs with our disposable cameras turned out ,in the end, to be a big blur.

Once summer was over and school started in September, we were thrilled to find out that we were going to work with new equipment -- and that we were marrying the interview project with Edible English and there would be no divorce. This time around for our interviews, we were fortunate to have two sets of state-of- the- art audio equipment and software donated to us by Notre Dame Parish in North Caldwell. We also received "Swank," a complete multimedia desk top center and accompanying sound system, and two Nikon COOLPIX cameras donated by Michael and Michele Mathews. Michael had attended one of our interview project presentations and was impressed by our work, but he immediately saw the need for upgraded technology and equipment.

Eager to get started, we had to first learn the "how-tos" of the cameras, Audacity --our audio editing program -- and the Edirol R-09, an audio device used by professional journalists. Several guests -- from professional sound services to AP and Gannett editors, as well as a freelance photographer and a photo editor at The Record -- came to teach us hands-on techniques for our upcoming interviews in the field. Literally.


In the field, and by that we mean Dreyer's Farm in Cranford, we interviewed Jessica Dreyer and her Uncle Henry Dreyer and some employees. With the Edirols and handheld mics in hand, we covered everything from the farm's history to working with family and what it's like running a local farm. We also wanted to know how Jessica balances motherhood and seriously, can a woman help run a farm and still manage mani/pedis? We also captured ambient sounds like rain, the tractor, sprinklers and people walking in the dirt because this experience was as much about place as it was people.

With the new cameras, we put to use what we were taught: we watched lighting, angles, up close and personal portraits and catching people doing their work like the two women picking string beans and men tying haystacks.

After a delightful morning at the farm, we were treated to an exquisite four course meal at Boulevard Five 72 in Kennilworth. Chef Scott Snyder gave us a 15-minute interview where we discussed what inspired him to be a chef, his feelings about shopping with local farmers -- including the Dreyers -- and only serving seasonal food.

English Goes Edible



Up and down, high and low, Edible English, who would know?

How could Edible and English go together you may wonder? Last April, our English teacher, Mary Ann D'Urso, decided it was time for our literature class to go green. One day we were reading Seedfolks by Paul Fleischman, about an urban neighborhood in Cleveland which transformed a vacant garbage lot into a lush and fertile community garden. The next thing we knew, our hands were mixing potting soil with topsoil. The smell was like being stuck at a red light behind a garbage truck.

Most of us had never gardened before. As we started blending soils, we debated, is it still too heavy? Do we need more of the light stuff? Eventually, the texture grew silky. "When it comes to mixing dirt, I would compare it to baking a chocolate cake. The way you have to mix the dirt until all the lumps are gone and the mixture is nice and fluffy. Little by little, our garden is rising into a beautiful cake," wrote Cynthia Sanchez in her E.E. journal.


Faced with seeds, seeds and more seeds, it was hard to imagine how these ground pepper-like flecks or brownish grains that looked like rice would become arugula and mesclun mixes, tomatoes, amethyst basil, Greek oregano, cilantro and push beans. And so it all began...

We planted in classroom window boxes and outside, we transformed a cement ramp into a small garden with a raised bed and clay pots. A few people even donated decorative pots and purple, white, red, and pink Impatients . Each day, we watched. And we watered. And we watched. And we watered. And then, WE HAD BEANS!!! Cilantro beat out basil, but once basil broke through the smell was delightful, outrageous and mouth-watering. The tomatoes took forever. We wondered if they would grow.

People walked by and noticed our sign -- Kenmare Goes Green -- which we designed and painted in class. Curious, they started looking over the wrought iron railing to observe what was happening in the space. Often, neighborhood residents smiled as the garden took shape and the corner of Washington and York streets got a little greener.

Near the end of the school term, we had enough herbs and salad fixings to share a meal together. We even had a few cherry tomatoes -- what we thought we'd never see or taste -- to add to our greens (some of which were bitter and, to Coco, peppery. Malisa, on the other hand, is a salad fanatic -- as are Mary Ann and Lourdes -- and was amazed that our salad, with all of its textures and scents, could compete with one you might eat at a restaurant.)

Dana, one of our classmates, decided to make homemade sauce and pizzas. She made pizzas featuring goat cheese, mozzarella, basil and oregano from our garden. "I was really happy everyone loved the pizza with the fresh basil we grew. It changed the taste of pizza and I was glad my classmates asked for seconds," Dana wrote in her E.E. journal on July 8. Soil and seeds progressed with such speed it gave us a need to feed. Indeed.